Baker & Hostetler v. Jobin (In Re M & L Business MacHines Co.)

153 B.R. 312, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5323, 1993 WL 120285
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedApril 9, 1993
DocketCiv. A. No. 92-K-1555, Bankruptcy No. 90 15491 CEM, Adv. No. 92 1666 RJB
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 B.R. 312 (Baker & Hostetler v. Jobin (In Re M & L Business MacHines Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker & Hostetler v. Jobin (In Re M & L Business MacHines Co.), 153 B.R. 312, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5323, 1993 WL 120285 (D. Colo. 1993).

Opinion

*313 MEMORANDUM DECISION ON APPEAL

KANE, Senior District Judge.

This case is before the court on Baker & Hostetler’s (B & H) appeal from an order of the bankruptcy court awarding Christine Jobin (Trustee) $3,503.71 in attorney fees incurred in defending an action brought by the Resolution Trust Company (RTC). The RTC was the debtor’s sole secured creditor. In that capacity it claimed entitlement to $75,000 the trustee received from Robert G. Joseph (Joseph) former president of the debtor. The bankruptcy court disagreed, ruled the $75,000 was property of the bankruptcy estate, and awarded the trustee her attorney fees as a sanction against B & H under Bankrupt.R. 9011. In this appeal, B & H claims that the bankruptcy court lost jurisdiction to award the attorney fees, that B & H did not have sufficient notice or opportunity to be heard concerning the appropriateness of sanctions, and that its conduct, in any event, was not sanctionable. For the reasons discussed below, I conclude that the bankruptcy court did have jurisdiction to award the fees, but did not give B & H an adequate opportunity to contest the appropriateness of the sanctions imposed. Therefore, I reverse and remand for a new sanctions hearing and do not reach the merits of the sanction itself.

I. Facts and Procedural History

The Capital Federal Savings and Loan Association of Denver loaned the debtor 6.3 million pursuant to a note and security agreement. The agreement gave Capital Federal a security interest in all inventory, equipment, accounts chattel paper and general intangibles, and proceeds the debtor then or later owned. The debtor defaulted on the note on April 2, 1990. The RTC, became receiver for the failed Capital Federal Savings & Loan Association of Denver on June 15, 1990.

On October 1, 1990, M & L filed a chapter 7 petition. It was later converted to a chapter 11 proceeding and then again converted to a chapter 7 case on September 26, 1991. The trustee and the RTC had been led to believe that the debtor had an inventory of computers worth approximately 2.5 million. The bankruptcy court had accordingly ordered the debtor to open a cash collateral account into which it was supposed to deposit the proceeds from the sale of the existing inventory together with any other funds received. Joseph, as president of M & L, repeatedly asserted that the bank had cash collateral totalling more than 1 million.

On January 23, 1991, the bankruptcy court ordered M & L to turn over all cash collateral to the trustee on or before January 28, 1991. When M & L did not, the trustee took a note from Joseph for $945,-000 secured by Joseph’s personal jewelry. After Joseph defaulted on the note, the trustee sold the jewelry for $75,000.

The RTC filed an adversary proceeding against the trustee on September 5, 1991. Its complaint asked the bankruptcy court to determine that it had a superior interest in the $75,000 by virtue of its own note. The trustee moved for summary judgment and for sanctions on October 11, 1991, asserting that the RTC had no claim to the proceeds because the jewelry and proceeds were not cash collateral or traceable to it. The bankruptcy court denied the motion on November 12, 1991 as premature, but specifically told the trustee she could renew the motion upon completion of discovery. 1

On December 20,1991, the parties signed and filed a joint pretrial statement, listing claims, defenses, witnesses, exhibits and the like. On the same day the trustee renewed her motion for summary judgment and sanctions. After RTC responded, the bankruptcy court set a hearing for February 18, 1992. It entered its written order on February 27, 1992. It granted summary judgment in the trustee’s favor on two issues: judicial estoppel and post-peti *314 tion diversions. It refused to rule that the RTC had a security interest in a general intangible that arose because of certain pre-petition diversions by Joseph. It also could not determine what consideration Joseph gave to the trustee for the note.

It may be ... that the RTC has a security interest in a general intangible that arose because of pre-petition diversions; however, it is unclear whether the pre-petition diversions were consideration for the note given by Mr. Joseph. The Court cannot tell ... whether the trustee knew of the pre-petition diversions when she took the note or if she took the note solely to secure receipt of accounts receivable. If she took the note only in lieu of the accounts receivable, the RTC cannot maintain a security interest in this note, since there were no accounts receivable and consequently nothing to which the RTC’s lien could attach.

R. Vol. I, # 40 at 4.

The case came to trial on July 14, 1992. Neither party addressed itself to the sanctions issue in any detail. During her closing, the trustee renewed her motion for sanctions. The bankruptcy court only alluded to them in passing.

The matter will stand submitted. I’ll do a written opinion on it, and Ms. Jobin, if — and I’m not prejudging this in any way — if I decide that you may be entitled to rule 11 sanctions, I will give you an appropriate time to file any affidavits .... But I don’t want that to be any indication that I’m leaning one way or the other on it.

The bankruptcy court entered it’s written opinion and order on July 28, 1992. It found all issues for the trustee. Specifically, it said:

The evidence at trial was clear that the Trustee did not know of the pre-petition diversions at the time she took the note from Mr. Joseph. The security agreement for the November 1990 note was signed by Mr. Joseph on January of 1991, and it was not until late summer/early fall of that year that the trustee learned of the pre-petition diversions. The consideration for the note was the trustee’s forbearance in not immediately proceeding against Mr. Joseph for his failure to turn over cashier’s checks that were allegedly collections on what turned out to be non-existent accounts receivable.

R. Vol. I, #47. In the same order, the bankruptcy court imposed sanctions against B & H for all actions after its February 27, 1992 order granting partial summary judgment. It stated that:

[T]he only remaining issues to be determined after that date clearly could have been resolved with one simple phone call, since the key issue was when the Trustee learned of the pre-petition diversions. The Court finds that sanctions against Plaintiff’s attorneys are warranted in the amount of the Trustee’s costs in continuing to defend this action after February 27, 1992.

Id. The bankruptcy court went on to give the trustee ten days within which to submit a bill of costs and B & H ten days thereafter within which to object.

The trustee filed a bill of costs on July 31, 1992. It included a request for attorney fees. The RTC filed its notice of appeal and an objection to the trustee’s bill of costs on August 7, 1992. This court docketed the notice of appeal on August 10, 1992, sub. num. 92-CV-1555. The trustee responded to the RTC’s objections on August 14, 1992.

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Bluebook (online)
153 B.R. 312, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5323, 1993 WL 120285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-hostetler-v-jobin-in-re-m-l-business-machines-co-cod-1993.